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Homilies | Sunday, February 22, 2015

You are chosen to become, in Christ, saints

Homily by Archbishop Wenski during Rite of Election

Homily by Archbishop Thomas Wenski during Rite of Election. Feb. 22, 2015 at St. Mary Cathedral.  

Today’s Gospel tells us that the Spirit led Jesus out into the desert where he was tempted by the devil.

Because he was truly human, like us, Jesus was tempted; but unlike us he didn’t sin. But it is precisely because he shared in our struggle with temptations that we can share in his victory over sin, death and the devil. And this is what Baptism promises us – for if the wages of sin is death, in baptism, we die with Christ to sin, so that freed from the snares of Satan, we can rise with him to new life.

You may remember that old New Orleans’ jazz anthem: Oh when the saints, Oh when the saints go marching in, Oh when the saints go marching in, Oh I want to be in that number when the saints go marching in.

Well, today, you are enrolled in that number, the number of the elect, those chosen to become, in Christ, saints. By your enrollment in the book of the Elect, you are saying that you want to be holy.

The word “saint” simply means a “holy one.” In Haitian Creole, the language in which I preached in every day for almost twenty years, “saint” is translated: "Zanmi Bondye” – a friend of God. This is a beautiful, and I might add, a most appropriate, translation; for the saints are friends of God – and only one who is holy can claim to be a friend of God.

And that is what baptism makes of us: friends of God, reconciled to Him through the suffering, death and resurrection of his Son, Jesus Christ, in whom we are baptized and through whom and through the indwelling of his Holy Spirit we entered into the holiness of God.

To accept a gift of friendship implies a “yes” to the friend and a “no” to all that is incompatible with this friendship, to all that is incompatible with the life as a member of God’s family, with true life in Christ. This is what is implied in the word “metanoia” or conversion.

Conversion means a turning to and a turning from - a turning to the Lord and a turning from sin. But this does not end with baptism; as Catholics, we believe that conversion is our life’s work. Our earthy pilgrimage must always be lived as a continuing turning to the Lord, and therefore a continuing turning away from sin. Thus the first recorded words of Jesus were: “Repent, and believe in the Gospel.” (cf. Mark)

At the Easter Vigil, you will make your profession of faith. And at Easter, all of us who have been baptized already will be also asked to renew that same profession of faith. That profession of faith based on the Apostles’ Creed is our “yes” to God. It is our pledge that – in spite of whatever trials and tribulations we may face – we will walk through this life as a friend of God, as a friend of Jesus and in the company of his friends, that is, his Catholic Church.

Now before you can say yes, you also have to say no to something. In the desert, Jesus says no to Satan and to his false promises of power, pleasure, and vain riches. And, of course, before you make that profession of faith on Holy Saturday evening, you will be asked to renounce Satan and all his works and all his empty promises.

For you, catechumens, Lent is a time of final preparations for that day, the day of your rebirth in Christ. Lent for you must resemble in some way the desert experience of Jesus. As Jesus prayed and fasted for 40 days, Lent must also be for us a time of prayer and fasting so that when Holy Saturday comes you will be ready to have your sins forgiven in the waters of baptism. By your fasting and mortifications, you will learn – as all of us must learn - to say “no” to ourselves and to the sinful inclinations of our fallen human nature so that we might be more ready to “say yes” to God.

The content of that yes to God is expressed in 10 Commandments. And it is important that we understand that the Commandments are not just a pack of prohibitions. To be a Christian is not a burden but a gift. The commandments are not impositions on our lives or limitations to our freedom. The commandments actually put forth a great vision of life and show us the way to true freedom.

Pope Francis reminds us: "Belief in God makes us bearers of values that often do not coincide with the fashion and opinion of the moment, and calls on us to adopt standards and behaviors that do not belong to the common way of thinking," he said. "The Christian should not be afraid to swim against the tide to live his own faith, resisting the tendency to conform." Baptism is a gift – a gift that must be accepted, and once accepted it becomes a task that must be lived.

Oh when the saints, Oh when the saints go marching in, Oh when the saints go marching in, Oh I want to be in that number when the saints go marching in.

Yes, today you are enrolled in that number, you are chosen to be saints, to be Zanmi Bondye, friends of God.

As the day of baptism draws nearer – the day on which your conversion – your turning to God and turning away from sin – is solemnized in the Rites of Christian Initiation, remain steadfast in prayer and know that your Catholic brothers and sisters are praying for you, and awaiting with great joy your entry into the Church. Remember the words spoken over and over again in the Scriptures and repeated to us so often by Pope St. John Paul II: “Be not afraid.” Don’t be afraid to walk through life as a friend of God. 

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